Alice Walker was born on February 9, 1944, in Eatonton, GA. She was the
eighth child of Willie Lee Walker and Minnie Tallulah Grant Walker. At the age
of eight, she lost sight in one of her eyes when her brother accidentally shot her
while playing. She graduated high school as the Valedictorian of her class, and
went on to attend college at Spelman College in Georgia. Two years later, in
1963, she transferred to Sarah Lawrence College in New York, where she received
her bachelor of arts degree.

In 1964, Walker traveled to Uganda, Africa as an exchange student. Upon her
return to the United States, she found out that she was pregnant. She opted to
have an abortion mostly in order to avoid disappointing her parents. During this
time she wrote volumes of poetry to cope. In 1965, Alice Walker received her
B.A. from Sarah Lawrence College. She wrote a short story, "To Hell With Dying,"
based on her experience with the abortion. Her mentor Muriel Ruykeser sent the
story to a publisher and to Langston Hughes. Her story was published and she
received a handwritten note of encouragement from Langston Hughes. (Resource)

After finishing college, Walker lived for a short time in New York. From the mid
1960s to the mid 1970s, she lived in Tougaloo, Mississippi. She married in 1967,
and divorced in 1976. Her first book of poems came out in 1968 and her first
novel just after her daughter's birth, in 1969.

In 1982, her third book was published, The Color Purple, which received a
Pulitzer Prize in 1983. Alice Walker started her own publishing company, Wild
Trees Press, in 1984. In 1989 and 1992, in two books, The Temple of My Familiar
and Possessing the Secret of Joy, Walker took on the issue of female
circumcision in Africa.